单选题Health care providers wish to improve their ______ through regular
continuing education.
A. equivalence
B. competence
C. relevance
D. prevalence
单选题Just as there are occupations that require college or even higher
degrees, ______ occupations for which technical training is necessary.
A. so too there are
B. so also there are
C. so there are too
D. so too are there
单选题 "I smoke for my health," I proclaimed in a newspaper
article published in 1979. Since I am a doctor, this advice attracted amused
attention. I reasoned that smoking made me cough and thus prevented pneumonia;
smoking made my heart go faster and eliminated the need for special exercise;
smoking restrained my appetite and kept me trim. And then, at 51, I had a heart
attack. I knew the risk factors for early heart disease, high
blood-cholesterol levels and smoking. The first four were in my favor, but 1;
chose to smoke. Strange how the evidence that linked smoking to
heart disease appeared unclear to me, and how the same data now appear
overwhelmingly convincing. Why stop now? Smokers who stop after their first
heart attack have an 80-percent chance of living ten more years—if they don't, a
60-per cent chance. As a smoker, I always resented the fact
that we smokers received only scorn from nonsmokers. How could nonsmokers know
that smoking was bad for the health if there were no smokers to prove it? Being
a member of the experimental group, rather than the control group, deserves a
certain measure of social appreciation. I've done my time. I'm now ready to be a
control. No longer smoke for my health. My health can't stand the
help. Will I miss the late-night trips to find a store that's
still open and selling cigarettes? Will I miss searching through ashtrays (烟灰缸)
to find the longest butt that is still smokable? Only time will tell. Not
smoking may give me the time to find out. Was it easy to stop?
Sure. Here is all you have to do. First, experience a severe crushing pain under
your breastbone as you finish a cigarette. Next, have yourself admitted to a
coronary-care(心脏康复) unit and be stripped of your clothing and belongings.
Finally, remain in the unit at ad-solute bed rest for four days while smoking is
forbidden. This broke my had-it. See if it works for you.
单选题"Techno-stress"-frustration arising from pressure to use new technology is said to be (41) , reports Maclean's magazine of CanadA. Studies point to causes that (42) "the never-ending process of learning how to use new technologies to the (43) of work and home life as a result of (44) like e-mail, call-forwarding and wireless phones." How can you cope? Experts recommend setting (45) . Determine whether using a particular device will really simplify life or merely add new (46) . Count on having to invest time to learn a new technology well enough to realize its full benefits. " (47) time each day to turn the technology off," and devote time to other things afforded or deserving (48) attention. "People start the day by making the (49) mistake of opening their e-mail, instead of working to a plan," notes Vancouver productivity expert Dan Stamp. "The best hour and a half of the day is spent on complete (50) .
单选题 Passage Four When
imaginative men turn their eyes towards space and wonder whether life exists in
any part of it, they may cheer themselves by remembering that life need not
resemble closely the life that exists on Earth. Mars looks like the only planet
where life like ours could exist, and even this is doubtful. But there may be
other kinds of life based on other chemistry, and they may multiply on Venus or
Jupiter. At least we cannot prove at present that they do not.
Even more interesting is the possibility that life on their planets may be in a
more advanced stage of evolution. Present-day man is in a peculiar and probably
temporary stage. His individual units retain a strong sense of personality. They
are, in fact, still capable under favorable circumstances of leading individual
lives. But man's societies are already sufficiently developed to have enormously
more power and effectiveness than the individuals have. It is
not likely that this transitional situation will continue very long on the
evolutionary time scale. Fifty thousand years from now man's societies may have
become so close-knit that the individuals retain no sense of separate
personality. Then little distinction will remain between the organic parts of
the multiple organisms and the inorganic parts (machines) that have been
constructed by it. A million years further on man and his machines may have
merged as closely as the muscles of the human body and the nerve cells that set
them in motion. The explorers of space should be prepared for
some such situation. If they arrive on a foreign planet that has reached an
advanced stage (and this is by no means impossible), they may find it being
inhabited by a single large organism composed of many closely cooperating
units. The units may be "secondary"—machines created millions
of years ago by a previous form of life and given the will and ability to
survive and reproduce. They may be built entirely of metals and other durable
materials. If this is the case, they may be much more tolerant of their
environment, multiplying under conditions that would destroy immediately any
organism made of carbon compounds and dependent on the familiar carbon
cycle. Such creatures might be relics of a past age, millions
of years ago, when their planet was favorable to the origin of life, or they
might be immigrants from a favored planet.
单选题 At least since the Industrial Revolution, gender roles have
been in a state of transition. As a result, cultural scripts about marriage have
undergone change. One of the more obvious changes has occurred in the roles that
women {{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}. Women have moved into the
world of work and have become adept at meeting expectations in that arena, while
maintaining their family roles of nurturing and creating a (n) {{U}}
{{U}} 2 {{/U}} {{/U}}that is a haven for all family members.
{{U}} {{U}} 3 {{/U}} {{/U}}many women experience strain from
trying to "do it all," they often enjoy the increased rewards that can result
from playing multiple roles. As women's roles have changed, changing
expectations about men's roles have become more {{U}} {{U}} 4
{{/U}} {{/U}}Many men are relinquishing their major responsibility {{U}}
{{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}}the family provider. Probably the most
significant change in men's roles, however, is in the emotional {{U}}
{{U}} 6 {{/U}} {{/U}}of family life. Men are increasingly expected
to meet the emotional needs of their families, especially their wives.
In fact, expectations about the emotional domain of marriage have become
more significant for marriage in general. Research on {{U}} {{U}}
7 {{/U}} {{/U}}marriage has changed over recent decades points to the
increasing importance of the emotional side of the relationships and the
importance of sharing in the "emotion work" {{U}} {{U}} 8
{{/U}} {{/U}}to nourish marriages and other family relationships. Men and
women want to experience marriages that are interdependent, {{U}} {{U}}
9 {{/U}} {{/U}}both partners nurture each other, attend and respond to
each other, and encourage and promote each other. We are thus seeing marriages
in which men's and women's roles are becoming increasingly more {{U}}
{{U}} 10 {{/U}} {{/U}}
单选题When he was young, he was {{U}}afflicted{{/U}} with paralysis.
A. inflicted
B. stricken
C. reflected
D. influenced
单选题 Only a handful of creatures on earth carry the dread
title "man-eater". The great white shark is one, quick at times snap up swimmers
and ship-wrecked sailors. People have been meals for lions and tigers.
Crocodiles will attack human prey. But perhaps no creature is more blindly
savage than a small fish of South America's inland waters—the piranha.
At first glance, the piranha seems harmless enough. Deep-bellied and
flat, it looks like a sunfish a youngster might catch on a lazy Sunday
afternoon. It is actually a close relative to silver dollar—an ornamental and
placid fish prized by aquarium enthusiasts. But towards the business end of a
piranha, any similarity to its more docile brethren ends. The
head of the piranha is massive by scale, its raked-back skull armored by thick
bone. Its large, round eyes are sometimes blood red; its mouth is armed with
triangular teeth as keen as razors. When the lower jaw, thrust forward in
bulldog fashion, snaps shut, the upper and lower teeth mesh perfectly. The
result on anything caught in between is that of surgical steel on butter. One
bite and out comes a neat piece of flesh the size of a dollar.
We had a chance to see those dread jaws in action ourselves when we hired a
guide, Jorge, to take us fishing out from Manarus, in Brazil's jungle. An hour
after we left the city, Jorge cut the engine in an inlet off the muddy Amazon,
and baited a hook with raw meat. Almost immediately, something struck, and Jorge
hauled the line back in, flipping a struggling fish about 12 inches long into
the bilge," Red piranha," he warned." Watch your hands and feet."
Thrashing in the narrow boat bottom, sunlight glittering off its
vermilion belly, it looked as handsome as any tropical fish we'd see. The
fierce-looking jaws, however, were snapping wildly at the air, Jorge reached for
an oar to deal it a blow just as the hook worked loose from the fish's mouth.
With a lightning-swift snap, the piranha chopped a neat semicircular chunk from
the wooden oar. We now understand why so many fishermen in piranha country are
missing fingers and toes.
单选题Impressed by the women's desire to learn, Sachs and Brown helped them hammer out a business plan. A. hang out B. set out C. figure out D. work out
单选题The company has announced that it will {{U}}undertake{{/U}} an
investigation into this accident.
A. enter upon
B. put off
C. turn in
D. set aside
单选题Fearful of losing her job for good, this lady decided to talk to the manager directly. A. for benefits B. by luck C. for ever D. at hand.
单选题Ways have to be found to
accommodate
the special needs of these left-behind children in rural areas.
单选题Directions: In this section you will hear two mini-talks.
At the end of each talk, there will be some questions. Both the talks and the
questions will be read only once. After each question, there will be a pause.
During the pause.
单选题This old man had trouble expressing the
attachment
he felt when arriving at his native town.
单选题Although in her teens, the eldest daughter had to quit school to help
______ the family.
A. provide for
B. head for
C. fall for
D. go for
单选题The government will ______ a long time to dissipate the mistrust among
stakeholders in the market.
A. take
B. spend
C. cost
D. involve
单选题 {{B}}Passage Four {{/B}} Iris
Rossner has seen eastern Germany customers weep for joy when they drive away in
shiny, new Mercedes-Benz sedans. "They have tears in their eyes and keep saying
how lucky they are," says Rossner, the Mercedes employee responsible for
post-delivery celebrations. Rossner has also seen the French pop corks on
bottles of champagne as their national flag was hoisted above a purchase. And
she has seen American business executives, Japanese tourists and Russian
politicians travel thousands of miles to a Mercedes plant in southwestern
Germany when a classic sedan with the trade mark three-pointed star was about to
roll off the assembly line and into their lives. Those were the good economic
miracle of the 1960s and ended in 1991. Times have
changed. "Ten years ago, we had clear leadership in the market," says Mercedes
spokesman Horst Krambeer. "But over this period, the market has changed
drastically. We are now in a pitched battle. The Japanese are partly
responsible, but Mercedes has had to learn the hard way that even German firms
like BMW and Audi have made efforts to rise to our standards of technical
proficiency." Mercedes experienced one of its worst
years ever in 1992. The auto market's worldwide car sales fell by 5 percent from
the previous year, to a low of 527,500. Before the decline, in 1988, the company
could sell close to 600,000 cars per year. In Germany alone, there were 30,000
fewer new Mercedes registrations last year than in 1991. As a result, production
has plunged by almost 600,000 cars to 529,400 last year, a level well beneath
the company's potential capacity of 650,000, Mercedes'
competitors have been catching up in the United States, the world's largest car
market. In 1986, Mercedes sold 100,000 vehicles in America; by 1991, the number
had declined to 59,000. Over the last two years, the struggling company has lost
a slice of its US market share to BMW, Toyota and Nissan. And BMW outsold
Mercedes in America last year for the first time in its history. Meanwhile, just
as Mercedes began making some headway in Japan, a notoriously difficult market,
the Japanese economy fell on hard times and the company saw its sales decline by
13 percent in that country. Revenues will hardly
improve this year, and the time has come for getting down to business. At
Mercedes, that means cutting payrolls, streamlining production and opening up to
consumer needs—revolutionary steps for a company that once considered itself
beyond improvement.
单选题An important innovation in this college was the introduction of the seminary method for advanced students. A. idea B. change C. matter D. policy
单选题
单选题 On September 13, the New York City Health Department became
the first in the nation to ban the sale of sugared beverages larger than 16 oz.
at restaurants, mobile food carts, sports arenas and movie theaters.
Supermarkets and convenience stores would be exceptions to the law,
however. The ban on large drinks was championed by New York
City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has a reputation for taking aggressive steps
to improve city residents' health. Often criticized for creating a government
that tries to give too much advice or make too many laws about how people should
live their lives, Bloomberg has been at the forefront of finding innovative but
controversial ways of pushing people to make healthier choices.
It's a bold experiment in the anti-obesity campaign. With at least two-thirds of
American adults now considered overweight or obese—including more than half of
New York City adults and nearly 40% of the city's public elementary and
secondary school students—fighting obesity is one of the mayor's signature
causes, and sugary drinks a longtime target. "We are dealing with a crisis... we
need to act on this," said Board of Health member Deepthiman Gowda, a professor
of medicine at Columbia University. Bloomberg has noted that the ban doesn't
prevent people from buying several small sodas at a time if they wish, but
health officials hope that the inconvenience will eventually get people to cut
down on their use of sugared drinks. While it's widely
supported by health professionals, it's not popular with food retailers or most
city residents. Some health officials, as well as the restaurant and beverage
industry, are critical of the ban. They ask, why single out sugared sodas;
obesity has many causes and contributors, not just what people drink. And if
sugared beverages are being targeted, why not take stronger measures against
other sources of sugar, such as candy and other sweets? Many
restaurant owners, fast-food chains and makers of sodas, including Coca-Cola and
McDonald's, are also upset over what they see as a discriminatory policy that
could hurt certain businesses while rewarding others. The groups plan to
continue to challenge the ruling, including taking their concerns to court. "We
are smart enough to make our own decisions about what to eat and drink," Liz
Berman, the chairperson of the New Yorkers for Beverage Choices coalition, said
in a statement.